The city of Minneapolis and a coalition of police-reform organizations have settled a lawsuit over expanding public access to contract negotiations with the Minneapolis police union.
As a result, the city will have to publish the time and location of its public bargaining sessions with the Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis and ensure the public may observe.
The terms of the agreement will last through three contracts, or until Dec. 31, 2028, whichever comes first.
"For the first time ever — that any of us in MPLS for a Better Police Contract know of — the city is now committed to publishing notice of public negotiations sessions," said lawyer Stacey Gurian-Sherman, who served as co-counsel with Micala Tessman.
Minneapolis officials declined to comment.
The lawsuit was filed last year and stems from the desire of three organizations — Communities United Against Police Brutality, Racial Justice Network, and Our Revolution Twin Cities — to witness police contract negotiations.
Organized under the name "MPLS for a Better Police Contract," the coalition created 14 recommendations for the contract, including limiting the number of hours an officer can work per week, mandating each officer get a mental health screening every three years and clarifying the city will not reimburse officers for legal costs incurred during their nonduty personal time.
"We had an agreement on those [recommendations] from a number of City Council members," said Dave Bicking of Communities United Against Police Brutality. "We were told that those would be considered in the negotiations. And then we weren't allowed to witness that negotiation to see if that was really the case."